Product Details
First Impressions

First Impressions
By Debra White Smith

Price:

This item is not available for purchase from this store.
Click here to go to Amazon to see other purchasing options.


10 new or used available from CDN$ 3.01

Average customer review:

Product Description

Loosely based on the beloved Pride and Prejudice, Debra White Smith’s First Impressions weaves a spell–binding, modern–day tale on the challenges and rewards of love.

Eddi Boswick has just settled in Texas to establish her law practice. Joining a local theater group, she is thrilled when she is given the role of Elizabeth in Pride and Prejudice.

William “Dave” Davidson III amassed a fortune in the computer industry but leads a quiet life on his ranch. On a dare he tries out for the play and lands the role of Darcy.

Sparks fly each time the lawyer meets the rancher. When Eddi uncovers Dave’s secret will her heart soften? Will Dave’s fear of “being tamed” keep him from discovering love?


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #318096 in Books
  • Published on: 2004-02-01
  • Released on: 2004-02-01
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 327 pages

Customer Reviews

Great idea... could have been better4
I've been on a Jane Austen kick for a while so I was very excited to discover White Smith's series. What a neat idea! I did enjoy First Impressions and am such a sucker for romance that I will likely read the rest of the books (plus, I'm just too curious to see what the author has done with the stories) but I also have to agree on some of the negative points raised by other reviewers. The editors, actually, should have done a better job of catching some annoying and distracting repetitions -- for example, too many references to Eddi's french braid (gah!) or the smell of Mrs. DeBloom's cheese dip (bleah). I also agree that at some point the characters could have acknowledged some of the similarities between the play they were performing and their own lives. Maybe it's because I'm from Montreal, but some of the Texas culture and the dialogue seemed a bit exaggerated or forced to me and I struggled to picture the outfits being described because they sounded too 80s to me (a lavender suit? city shorts? french braids on tough, professional 30-something lawyers?) But maybe styles are different in small-town Texas! :) Again, a lot of these were editing problems, but it doesn't help the book much by my pointing that out, does it? Maybe it just makes me feel less guilty about sounding critical of the author. :D

I "hear" the reviewer who pointed out that the Christian element in the book, though present, wasn't overt. Although it is just a romance novel, I agree that the characters' faith and church involvement could have been less incidental and more fundamental.

On a more positive note, I should add that I really appreciated the sub-plot about the youngest sister -- a very tricky topic was handled sensitively.

I struggled with how many stars to give this book because I really did enjoy it, but purely for the entertainment it provided. If you're looking for fine literature, you may be disappointed. But if you just want a feel-good story that feeds your Jane Austen addiction, I think you'll enjoy this book.

I can't help it... I have to read Romance & Reason next! :)

a little naive?4
I must say I did enjoy this book for its attempt at modernizing a classic story but at the risk of spoiling it for some, I must point out something.
I found it hard to believe that Eddi & Dave, playing Elizabeth and Darcy in a theatrical adaptation of Pride & Prejudice, were so naive as to not think: "Gee, isn't it ironic that our relationship seems to be following along the same lines as the play we are acting in?" Come on, if we as readers could see the similiarities, surely intelligent characters, as portrayed in the book, would catch on to it too.

Great Reading - Loved It5
I enjoyed this book very much. Pride and Prejudice is one of my favorite books.

Would Debra consider writing a sequel with the characters in modern times and after married?